that s a valid question. and for my personal choice, i m very determined that i wouldn t go back to hong kong to face jail unreasonably for a very long time. but you re right that we have seen dissidents chinese dissidents, hong kong dissidents being kidnapped by, you know, underground police officers or ccp agencies. so that can happen, so i m being very careful in selecting the places that i can travel to. i wouldn t travel to any countries where there s an extradition agreement with hong kong or china, so i wouldn t go to africa or the middle east or most of asia. i m being very careful so that i can continue to fight. a senior figure, a former director of operations, in britain s secret intelligence service said
in nato, we have always shown that whatever our differences, we can always sit down, find common ground and resolve any issues. nato s open door policy has been a historic success, welcoming finland and sweden into the alliance will make than stronger and the euro atlantic area more secure. let s get the latest from our correspondent mark lowen, who s in madrid. quite a break there, he originally wanted 45 of these extradited, i m not quite sure if that is going to happen. what other hard bargains did he drive which are perhaps not being discussed? ~ .. ., , he drive which are perhaps not being discussed? ~ ., , ., discussed? well, i actually asked the nato secretary discussed? well, i actually asked the nato secretary what - discussed? well, i actually asked the nato secretary what it - discussed? well, i actually asked| the nato secretary what it meant, this extradition agreement, for the kurdish journalists this extradition agreement, for the kurdishjournalists in this extradition
With the National Register of Citizens (NRC) process underway to detect the illegal foreigners residing in the country, Sherman Ali, the suspended Congress MLA
penalty as part of a us uk extradition agreement, but he does now face spending the rest of his life in jail. nomia iqbal, bbc news, virginia. as we ve been hearing, one of those killed was the british aid worker, david haines. his brother, mike, has been speaking about the impact his death has had on their family. david was my little brother. hejust had this charisma around him. he was a bubbly person. he drew people in. when david started talking with refugees, he changed. we saw for the first time a sense of purpose. he d found his calling. then you heard the news he d been kidnapped. yeah.
day, reliving the nightmare kayla mueller s mother wept on the stand as she read out ransom emails sent by elsheikh, saying the gang wanted millions for her daughter to be freed. former hostages who were released after the ransom was paid, described elsheikh and his accomplices as sadists who electrocuted, waterboarded and starved them. one said he tried to kill himself to escape. the defense tried to make out this was a case of mistaken identity, relying on the fact he always wore a full mask around hostages. in court when the verdicts came in, the families quietly wept and held each other s hands. there was an audible sigh of relief. it s taken nearly ten years for them to finally get justice. elsheikh showed very little reaction. he won t get the death penalty as part of a us uk extradition agreement, but he does now face spending the rest of his life in jail. nomia iqbal, bbc news, virginia.